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Browsing Tag: Mark Herring

A New Hope.

November 2017.

     Virginia’s off-off-year elections in 2017 were in the news as a barometer of popular sentiment after nearly a year of Trumpian rule.  The Commonwealth was especially suited for this test.  It had voted Democratic in three consecutive presidential contests, had two Democratic senators as well as a Democratic governor; however, its statehouse remained in Republican hands.  A wave-category outcome sufficient to fracture GOP control of the House of Delegates would signal disenchantment with Queens’ Gift to the World, especially as a result from south of the Mason-Dixon line, the lone jewel of the old Confederacy a chagrined Sun President had been unable to duct tape onto his diadem.

     The Democrats had a good night.  Ralph Northam became governor, Justin Fairfax lieutenant governor, and Mark Herring attorney general; the Great Embarrassment lay in the future.  The Democrats made substantial gains in the House of Delegates.  The Republican advantage shrank from twenty-two to a single seat, then jumped to two seats when drawing of lots determined the winner of a putatively tied district.  Had fortune smiled on the Democrat, the party would have wrested away control of the chamber.  Nevertheless, there were encouraging changes.  The incoming class of Democratic delegates boasted the nation’s first transgender state legislator (Danica Roem), a Democratic Socialist (Lee Carter), and much diversity beyond that.  A friend from Manhattan, she of the senior women’s book club, expressed it best:  “Thank you, Virginia!”

     The letter below comments on The Richmond Free Press’s election coverage.  The pleasing outcome did not bestow laurels on which to rest.  The GOP would mobilize to pad its bare majority and deploy every tool available, including underhanded ones.  Margins are fragile in a state gradually shifting its party allegiance.  When the letter was composed, control of the House of Delegates remained uncertain.  To satisfy my curiosity, I fed raw numbers from the House of Delegates races into Excel and discovered that the Democratic candidates in aggregate had taken nearly ten percent more votes than the Republicans statewide but could still conceivably fall short of a majority of seats.  That’s what happened and that’s the crux of the matter.

     Nonetheless, the hope engendered in Virginia in 2017 would be realized in 2019.

Here are Jeremy Lazarus’s articles:

Jeremy M. Lazarus, “Virginia Elects Democrats to Top Posts, Other Offices,” The Richmond Free Press, 9-11 November 2017, A1, A4 (http://richmondfreepress.com/news/2017/nov/10/its-sweep/).

Jeremy M. Lazarus, “House of Delegates to Become More Diverse,” The Richmond Free Press, 9-11 November 2017, A1, A4 (http://richmondfreepress.com/news/2017/nov/10/house-delegates-become-more-diverse/).

Here’s the letter:

“‘There Is No Space for Complacency,’” The Richmond Free Press, 16-18 November 2017, A9 (http://richmondfreepress.com/news/2017/nov/17/there-no-space-complacency/).